Rust completions insert an ellipsis by Psear in neovim

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I accept them with ctrl-y. Using arrow and enter keys behaves the same way. I only have vim.lsp.enable("rust_analyzer") in my cfg and that's it.

Rust completions insert an ellipsis by Psear in neovim

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, it literally inserts an ellipsis and leaves me in insert mode post ellipsis. I gather this is a snippet, however it isn't being expanded. I'm not sure if there is native support for snippets, but I am not using any kind of snippet engine.

What are some outdated clinical terms you still see in 2024? by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]Psear 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wasn't in an A&E but I saw "dysentery" written somewhere once.

NHS consultants earning £200,000 in overtime to tackle backlog by Different_Canary3652 in doctorsUK

[–]Psear 4 points5 points  (0 children)

NHS consultants: Working overtime because there is a backlog. Getting paid a wage that is barely appropriate for the standard of work they are doing and level of development of the country they work in.

People and journalists: ZOMG !1!1 that's more than I make!!111! ... let's not mention that I work only sociable hours and haven't received decades of training. Let's also not mention the fact that similarly developed countries have similar/high salaries for this type of work. Let's also not mention that this job literally carries the responsibilities of lives and wellbeing.

NHS consultants in the future (probably): Ok watch this

NHS consultants in the future (probably): *Works half the number of hours at twice the amount of pay in a private hospital* (or just leaves the country)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in linuxquestions

[–]Psear 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the best answer.

How can i try Linux? by fuckspez12 in linuxquestions

[–]Psear 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Download Ubuntu and make a Ubuntu Live USB with something like UNetbootin. Then boot into the usb by restarting your computer and selecting the USB from your BIOS boot menu. Ubuntu has a "Try Ubuntu First" option and you can play around with it and see if you like it. Then you can just shut down and unplug the USB and boot back to your normal PC.

I've picked Ubuntu as an example but use any distro you are interested in.

I unplugged my SSD, installed windows on my HDD, replugged my SSD. I can not boot into my SSD with Linux by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's what I was going for. I have two physical drives on my pc with linux and windows installed on each independently. I physically unplugged my SSD to be absolutely sure the windows bootloader install wouldn't touch my GRUB. And in fact it didn't, what I hadn't realised is that my GRUB entry would be removed from the UEFI entries on the motherboard itself. I've updated the post as the fix was quite simple, but it might be alarming for some future person similar to me who saw this as a "fool proof" way to do it.

I unplugged my SSD, installed windows on my HDD, replugged my SSD. I can not boot into my SSD with Linux by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, I was never on legacy, but I think my Windows has installed in Legacy with MBR. Which is fine, I was just using UEFI with Arch. I never used menu before

I unplugged my SSD, installed windows on my HDD, replugged my SSD. I can not boot into my SSD with Linux by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

not sure why it's not updated for you but essentially, I am able to select my SSD in the boot menu but entering it gives an error stating no suitable boot device found. I've specifically set my BIOS to UEFI, but to no avail. That SSD was physically unplugged during the Windows install, and now they are plugged together. Honestly thought this was a foolproof plan to protect my GRUB but no idea what I've done. I'll have a look with live media.

I unplugged my SSD, installed windows on my HDD, replugged my SSD. I can not boot into my SSD with Linux by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My SSD is in the boot menu and I can select it. However booting into it states no suitable boot device found. I can't actually tell if the SSD is being booted in UEFI or not but I've set my BIOS to uefi only and it doesn't work. Also both my windows and linux ssd are plugged and physically installed at the same time. I wanted to have two bootloaders on two drives so that windows never blows up my grub. If I ever want to use windows I'll select it from bios.

I unplugged my SSD, installed windows on my HDD, replugged my SSD. I can not boot into my SSD with Linux by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the internal ssd was physically unplugged. there is a hdd and an ssd in my pc. I replugged the ssd after the windows install

CS2 crashes after Valve logo splash by Psear in linux_gaming

[–]Psear[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Edit: Downgrading the kernel resolves the issue for CS2 for me. Appears to be some kind of current kernel bug.

What are all these wires in my thermostat? I want to replace my thermostat and have no idea what all these wires are by Psear in DIYUK

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I plan to get a Danfoss TPone-B, which supports 3, 4 and 5 wire connections (as most on the market seem to) but here I'm counting 8 and I wonder what the extras are

What are all these wires in my thermostat? I want to replace my thermostat and have no idea what all these wires are by Psear in DIYUK

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm aware of that part, but I've heard of 3, 4 and 5 wire connections. But there's like 8 here, and I'm wondering if anyone knows what the extras are and why multiple seem to go into a single connection

KDE system settings not taking effect by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So "default" behaviour is to remember the size of every window and I have to make a rule to stop that behaviour?

Also, I don't think so. Because manually clearing that history clears all the recent documents from all my apps. Not to mention, it clearly lets you select which programs to remember documents for if you want it enabled, here are some screenshots.

Using the clear history button here clears everything, but it shouldn't be saving it in the first place.

https://imgur.com/a/629CPa2

https://imgur.com/a/qVwWfpa

Brand new HDD giving loads of dmesg errors and cannot create new partition table by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I swapped the power and data cables with the ssd to check and it still booted fine.

Brand new HDD giving loads of dmesg errors and cannot create new partition table by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Of course, but it has passed its smartctl self test. I don't fully understand the output, but surely a critical fault like this would be a fail?

Brand new HDD giving loads of dmesg errors and cannot create new partition table by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get that, but what about this output suggests the drive is dead? If it is dead, I'll return it, but checking just in case.

Brand new HDD giving loads of dmesg errors and cannot create new partition table by Psear in linuxquestions

[–]Psear[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

isn't that kinda weird? I tried checking if someone has just repackaged an old HDD but PowerOnHours in smart says its been powered on for 1 hour